Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/united-kingdom

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Electoral district of Willoughby

Australian state-level electoral district


Summary

Australian state-level electoral district

FieldValue
nameWilloughby
statensw
image
captionInteractive map of district boundaries from the 2023 state election
lifespan1894–1920
1927–1988
1991–present
mpTim James
mp-party
namesakeWilloughby
electors60285
electors_year2023
area23.56
classInner-metropolitan
near-nDavidson
near-neWakehurst
near-eManly
near-seNorth Shore
near-sNorth Shore
near-swLane Cove
near-wLane Cove
near-nwDavidson

1927–1988 1991–present |mp-party = | near-n = Davidson | near-ne = Wakehurst | near-e = Manly | near-se = North Shore | near-s = North Shore | near-sw = Lane Cove | near-w = Lane Cove | near-nw = Davidson

Willoughby is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of New South Wales. It has been represented by Tim James of the Liberal Party since 12 February 2022.

History

Willoughby was an electoral district of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, first created in 1894 with the abolition of multi-member electoral districts from part of St Leonards, and named after and including the Sydney suburb of Willoughby. It was abolished in 1904 and re-established in 1913. In 1920 with the introduction of proportional representation, it was absorbed into the multi-member electorate of Ryde along with Burwood and Gordon. It was recreated in 1927 with the return to single-member electorates. It was abolished in 1988, with most of its territory becoming Middle Harbour. In 1991, Middle Harbour was abolished and replaced by a recreated Willoughby.

Like most seats in the North Shore, Willoughby is a stronghold for the Liberal Party. Counting its time as Middle Harbour, the Liberals or their predecessors have held the seat for all but two terms since the return to single-member seats in 1927. The one break in this tradition came in the "Wranslide" of 1978, when a split in the Liberal vote allowed 's Eddie Britt to sweep into office. However, a redistribution ahead of the 1981 election erased Britt's majority and made Willoughby notionally Liberal. Britt narrowly lost to future state opposition leader Peter Collins even in the face of the second "Wranslide."

The seat reverted to form in 1984, with Collins easily seeing off Britt in a rematch. Since then, Labor has usually run dead in Willoughby, and on some occasions has been pushed into third place. The only time the Liberal hold on the seat has been seriously threatened since the 1980s came on Collins' retirement in 2003. Pat Reilly, the longtime mayor of the City of Willoughby, ran as an independent and nearly defeated Liberal Gladys Berejiklian on Labor preferences. The swing against the Liberals was large enough to drop the Liberal margin over Labor to 7.2 percent, the closest in two decades. However, Berejiklian easily despatched Reilly in a rematch and held the seat without serious difficulty until her retirement in 2022.

Willoughby is one of four electorates in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly to have been held by two Premiers of New South Wales while in office. Both Premiers (Sir) Charles Wade and Gladys Berejiklian held Willoughby while in office, the other three electorates being Ku-ring-gai, Maroubra and Wollondilly.

Berejiklian has facts in common with her predecessor in Willoughby, Collins in that both had served as state Liberal leaders and prior to that served as Deputy Liberal leader and Treasurer although unlike Collins, Berejiklian held the positions of Deputy Liberal leader and Treasurer simultaneously.

Geography

On its current boundaries, Willoughby takes in the suburbs of Cammeray, Castle Cove, Castlecrag, Chatswood, Chatswood West, Cremorne, Middle Cove, Northbridge, North Willoughby, Willoughby, Willoughby East and parts of Artarmon, Crows Nest, Lane Cove North and St Leonards.

Members for Willoughby

First incarnation (1894–1904)MemberPartyTermSecond incarnation (1913–1920)MemberPartyTermThird incarnation (1927–1988)MemberPartyTermFourth incarnation (1991–present)MemberPartyTerm
Joseph Cullen1894–1894
Edward Clark1894–1895
George Howarth1895–1901
1901–1903
Charles Wade1903–1904
Edward Larkin1913–1915
John Haynes1915–1917
Reginald Weaver1917–1920
Edward SandersIndependent Nationalist1927–1930
1930–1932
1932–1943
George Brain1943–1943
1944–1945
1945–1968
Laurie McGinty1968–1977
1977–1978
Eddie Britt1978–1981
Peter Collins1981–1988
Peter Collins1991–2003
Gladys Berejiklian2003–2021
Tim James2022–present

Election results

Main article: Electoral results for the district of Willoughby

References

References

  1. (DistrictIndexes). "Elections for the District of Willoughby".
  2. "Willoughby- NSW Electorate, Candidates, Results". [[ABC News (Australia).
  3. {{NSW Parliamentary Record
  4. "Former Members". [[Parliament of New South Wales]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Electoral district of Willoughby — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report